Noetic effects of sin
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The noetic effects of sin are the ways that sin negatively affects and undermines the human mind and intellect. Moroney[1] argues that sin's noetic effects are most prominent in our knowledge of God (our "sense of divinity") and less prominent in other domains.
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Contents |
Calvin
Abraham Kuyper
See also
- Epistemology
- Sensus divinitatis — the sense of divinity
References
- Paul Helm, "John Calvin, the Sensus Divinitatis, and the noetic effects of sin" International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Springer, ISSN 0020-7047 Volume 43, Number 2, pg 82, April 1998
- Stephen K. Moroney, "How Sin Affects Scholarship: A New Model" Christian Scholar's Review, XXVIII, pg 432-451, Spring 1999
Notes
- ↑ Stephen K. Moroney, The Noetic Effects of Sin: A Historical and Contemporary Exploration of How Sin Affects Our Thinking, Lexington Books, 2000